


Ask the community...
Your refund makes total sense! I'm an accounting student and just completed my tax internship. The American Opportunity Credit is a huge benefit - $2,500 is the max and it sounds like you qualified for all of it. Plus, switching to married filing jointly almost always results in a tax benefit. Your withholding was probably still set up as if you were single, so you overpaid throughout the year. Nothing to worry about!
Thank you SO MUCH for the reassurance! One more question - does it matter that my husband only lived in the US for about 2 months of the tax year? I wasn't sure if that would affect our ability to file jointly.
You're welcome! Regarding your husband's residency situation, as long as he has a valid SSN and is a legal permanent resident by December 31st of the tax year, you can file jointly for the entire year. The IRS doesn't prorate based on when during the year he arrived. Since you mentioned he got his SSN and is a green card holder, you're definitely eligible for Married Filing Jointly status for the full year, even though he was only physically present for a couple months. This is actually working in your favor tax-wise!
Did turboTax automatically figure out the american opportunity credit for you or did u have to do sumthing special? I'm in college too and paid like $8k but my refund is only like $800
Are you claimed as a dependent on someone else's taxes? If your parents claim you, THEY get the education credits, not you. That might explain the difference.
Has anyone tried setting up EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System) for their estimated payments? I switched to that last year and found it helpful for tracking payments. You get confirmation numbers for each transaction. Doesn't stop the duplicate notices but at least gives you proof of payment.
I've heard about EFTPS but am confused about the setup process. Does it link directly to your bank account? And does it automatically calculate how much you should pay each quarter or do you still need to figure that out yourself?
Yes, you link it directly to your bank account during the setup process. It's a government system that lets you schedule and make federal tax payments online. It doesn't calculate your estimated payment amounts for you - you'll still need to determine that yourself based on your income projections. But it does give you an immediate confirmation number when you make a payment, which is super helpful for record-keeping. You can also view your payment history anytime, which makes it easier to verify that your payments were received if you get duplicate notices.
I had this same problem and it turns out in my case the two notices were actually for different things! One was the regular quarterly estimated tax payment reminder, but the second one was actually for an underpayment penalty from the previous year that just LOOKED similar. Check the form numbers carefully - if one is a CP-30 and the other is CP-503 or something different, they might be for different issues.
Since nobody's mentioned this yet - TRIPLE CHECK that your W-2 is correct before filing! My employer accidentally put the wrong social security number on mine (off by one digit) and it caused a massive headache when I filed. The IRS rejected my return and it took weeks to sort out. Make sure your name, SSN, address, and all the numbers in the boxes match your records. If you had multiple jobs, make sure you have a W-2 from each employer. And if you received corrected W-2s (marked as W-2c) make sure you're using those instead of the originals.
What exactly do we need to check on the W-2? Like which specific boxes should I pay attention to the most?
The most critical things to verify are your personal information (name, SSN, address) since those are used to match your return to IRS records. An error there can cause your entire return to be rejected. As for the financial information, check Box 1 (Wages, tips, other compensation) against your final paystub of the year to make sure it matches. Also verify Box 2 (Federal income tax withheld) since that directly impacts your refund or amount due. If you contributed to a 401(k), check that Box 12 has the correct code and amount for your contributions.
Anyone know if the IRS "Where's My Refund" tool actually works? I filed Jan 30th last year and that stupid tracker was stuck on "processing" for like 6 weeks even though I got my refund direct deposited after just 2 weeks.
It works but it's unreliable. Last year mine said "still processing" for 3 weeks AFTER I already received my refund. The IRS systems don't talk to each other very well. I'd just set up direct deposit and forget about it - the money will show up eventually.
Quick tip from someone who's been doing this for years with a rental in Canada: keep really detailed records of WHEN and HOW you dispose of furniture. Take date-stamped photos of damaged furniture before discarding and save any receipts from donations. I got audited two years ago and they specifically questioned several furniture items that "disappeared" from my depreciation schedule. Having documentation made it easy to prove I hadn't sold the items for cash. For items you throw away due to damage, a photo and brief written statement saved me tons of headache.
Do you document this separately for each tax year, or do you just keep a running log of all furniture items? I'm trying to set up a system that won't be a complete mess 5 years from now.
I keep a running spreadsheet with all furniture items, their purchase dates, costs, and depreciation schedule. Then I have a separate tab for disposed items where I record the disposal date, method (trashed, donated, sold), and any documentation I have. For tax filing purposes, I extract just that year's disposals. This system makes it easy to keep track over many years without creating a new document each tax season. I also back everything up with photos in a cloud folder organized by year of disposal. Might seem like overkill, but it saved me during that audit!
Has anyone used TurboTax for reporting furniture depreciation and disposal for foreign rentals? Their interface seems really confusing for this specific scenario and I'm not sure it's calculating things correctly.
I wouldn't recommend TurboTax for this. I tried last year for my UK rental and it was a nightmare. It doesn't handle the separate tracking of multiple furniture items well at all. I ended up switching to a tax pro who specializes in expat taxes.
Logan Chiang
Something similar happened to me in 2023. Even without the 1099-MISC, you need to report the income. Here's what I did: 1. I reported all income on Schedule C with the company name and address (found through Google) 2. I didn't have their EIN, so I just noted "business closed" in my tax records 3. I kept all my payment receipts, contracts, and email communications as backup The IRS never questioned it. Remember - THEY know you got paid because the company would have deducted those payments on THEIR taxes, even if they didn't send you the form. Don't risk underreporting!
0 coins
Isla Fischer
ā¢But what happens if the amount the company reports paying you (if they filed anything before going bankrupt) doesn't match what you report? Could that trigger an audit?
0 coins
Logan Chiang
ā¢That's a good question. If there's a discrepancy, it potentially could raise a flag in the IRS system. However, if you're reporting based on your actual income records (bank deposits, etc.), you're still doing the right thing. If the company reported incorrectly before going bankrupt, that's their mistake, not yours. Just make sure you have documentation of all the income you received - bank statements, invoices, contracts, emails confirming payments. If you're ever questioned, you can show you reported based on your actual earnings. The IRS is generally understanding when you can show you made a good-faith effort to report accurately.
0 coins
Miles Hammonds
Has anyone dealt with the state tax implications of this? I'm in California and had a similar issue last year, and the state tax board was actually more picky than the IRS about documentation.
0 coins
Ruby Blake
ā¢CA resident here too. The Franchise Tax Board definitely wants documentation, but I found they accepted my own records (invoices + bank statements) when I couldn't get a 1099 from a client who went out of business. I included a brief statement explaining the situation with my filing.
0 coins